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As the fairy lights on the Yuletide tree in their bunker twinkled in the closing minutes of Christmas Eve, two soldiers, working above ground, adorned a large “Vampire” drone with a deadly 20 ...
The drone can also be deployed within minutes and launched from a normal road. [133] On 26 February 2022, two TB2 drones were claimed shot down near Shchastia. [134] On 17 March 2022, a Bayraktar TB2 was shot down over Kyiv; Russia published images of the drone wreckage. [135] A second TB2 drone was shot down on 29 March 2022, in eastern Ukraine.
As of June 2024, around 3,000 soldiers were reported to be in the USF. [17] On 14 January 2025, Ukraine attacked Russian chemical factories and energy infrastructure in the Bryansk, Saratov, and Tula regions and the Republic of Tatarstan with missiles. The USF claimed that "drones successfully distracted Russian air defences, paving the way for ...
The Russians increasingly tried to disrupt the Ukrainian withdrawal with targeted artillery and drone attacks. One soldier, call-sign "Major", recalled that during the final withdrawal along the "very last" road out of Avdiivka-what he called the "road of death"-the evacuation convoy in front of him was struck by Russian artillery, wiping out ...
At this point, Kamyshin says the cost per kill for Ukraine’s FPV drones averages $1,700 per Russian soldier. He expects the price tag for killing an individual enemy fighter to drop to around ...
Ukraine's Ministry of Defence has released footage of a soldier appearing to use a drone to shoot at a Russian truck. This clip, posted on Twitter/X on Wednesday (30 August), purportedly shows a ...
People gathered at Independence Square in Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, carrying pictures of fallen Ukrainian soldiers. “For others, life goes on, but unfortunately for us it stopped when my brother’s heart stopped,” said Angelina Stashenko, holding a portrait of her 30-year-old brother, Denys Stashenko, who was killed in action in May in ...
The theater was hosting an exhibition on the use of consumer drones in the Russian Invasion of Ukraine, titled "Lyuti Ptashky" (Angry Birds), which was described by its organisers as "a closed meeting of engineers, military and volunteers." [1] Governor of Chernihiv Oblast, Vyacheslav Chaus, announced that 7 were dead, including a 6-year-old girl.